A Perfect Illustration of What Christ Did for Us

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009 | Christ, Salvation

I confess: Navigating through the nature of God at times leaves me feeling detached and remote.

Far off from God.

Granted, you can’t put your finger on infinity. Eternality. Self-existence.

These topics at first blush are unbelievably impractical, impersonal, ineffable and intimidating.

No wonder Job once argued that there was no arbitrator between man and God:

“In truth I know that this is so; But how can a man be in the right before God? If one wished to dispute with Him, he could not answer Him once in a thousand times.” Job 9:2-3

It’s at these times when a story like Doug Wilson’s Teacher illustration brings the sheer practicality of God and redemptive history home for me.

In a recent video John Piper shares the illustration in question. It’s an illustration on the difference between good advice and good news.

For those to lazy to watch the video [I sometimes fall into this category], let me summarize the illustration.

Picture a young man before his trigonometry teacher. It’s the first day of class. He’s anxious about passing. She gives him advice on how to succeed: Study hard. Memorize your tables. Do your homework.

He follows her advice. However, at the end of the semester, at the final exam, this young man is hunched over a blank piece of paper.

The teacher passes, notices the blank paper. More good advice looks like this: Relax. Answer the easy questions first. Build off of those. Think harder.

On the other hand, good news look like this: The teacher says, “Scoot over. I’ll take the exam for you.”

That illustration characterizes the gospel. The climax of redemptive history. And it distinguishes between good advice and good news.

It also articulates what’s meant by propitiation, substitutionary atonement, justification by faith alone.

And it reminds of us of the solid ground we stand on. It will be Christ’s righteousness–not our own–that is going to count for us on Judgment day.

In the end, Wilson’s illustrations is an image of the vivid, concrete anchor we have in Christ. The flesh and blood hope we have in the face of an unfathomable, holy God. And the compelling vision that stirs our soul to worship, work for and wonder at him who loved us so much that he sent his only son to die for us.

It grounds us in the spiritual reality that sometimes eludes us. Please share the story.

Related posts:

  1. How Do You Know Christ Is Real? 5 Reasons

Tags: , ,

5 Comments to A Perfect Illustration of What Christ Did for Us

Robert Madewell
June 24, 2009

Demian,
I think I’d look for another illustration, if I were you. A teacher trying to pass off her work as the students is not a good thing at all. That doesn’t help the student at all. Also, failing trig is not the same thing as being burned forever because a remote ancestor ate the wrong fruit.

Demian Farnworth
June 24, 2009

You crack me up, Robert.

al
June 25, 2009

Robert, you’re still looking at the trees and missing the forest, but I will concede you this one point: Demian’s example shows a comparison whereas, regarding the Gospel, there is also a pertinent contrast.

For the sinner, there is no “good advice.” The Law of God is beyond man’s ability to keep. Unless the Lawgiver says, “Scoot over. I’ll take the exam for you,” there is no hope. Only because Jesus Christ bore in His own body the punishment earned by guilty sinners can there be salvation for those who will receive it.

al
June 25, 2009

Demian, I watched both Piper’s and Wilson’s videos and have concluded that you are the gutsiest of the three, to make a claim of having a “perfect” illustration of what Christ did for us. Downright bodacious, Bro.!!! :o

Demian Farnworth
June 25, 2009

Al, perhaps “good?” “Great?” Perfect is loose, I admit. ;-)

Leave a comment

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes